Apart from the Germania of Tacitus, Jordanes´s History of the Goths is the preeminent source for Germanic history. Many opinions of nowadays scholars are based on his accounts. Of the utmost significance are the effects in the field of onomastics. In the end the idea developed by R. Much that the names of various Germanic tribes are nicknames can be tracked down to Jordanes´s explanation of the name Gepids. In a similar way modern scholarship took his narrative of the migrations of the Goths as a veracious description of remote realities in the past, Christensen's book unsettles the prevailing opinion of early Gothic history. This essay deals with the consequences of these findings on onomastics
People who leave their home, take their names with them. That is the reason why place names in new s...
The article reviews vol. 6 of the significant Deutscher Familiennamenatlas (Atlas of German Surnames...
The article focuses on the toponymy of the Eastern part of modern Germany where Slavic and Germanic ...
Apart from the Germania of Tacitus, Jordanes´s History of the Goths is the preeminent source for Ger...
Witold Ma´nczak has argued that Gothic is closer to Upper German than to Middle German, closer to Hi...
The Gothic people enter European history during the Roman Iron Age. Several groups of Goths come und...
open1noThis essay takes into account the Germanic personal names and their name-giving in the area ...
The Way of the Goths to Literacy as a Search for Identity. It is well known that the Goths, throug...
Jacob Grimm's Lithuanian studies culminated in his work on the German Dictionary (Deutsches Wörterbu...
The Jutes are known as one of the Germanic tribes who migrated to Britain and established the Englis...
The aim of this study is to propose a new interpretation of Jordanes’ famous work, De Origine Actibu...
The article gives a survey about a new manual to the Celtic languages in Western Europe. Its author ...
Scandinavian, closer to Danish than to Swedish, and that the original homeland of the Goths must the...
There is an air of mystery that surrounds the concept of place names. Questions revolving around the...
The author argues that archaeology and historical linguistics, each using their own tools, both seek...
People who leave their home, take their names with them. That is the reason why place names in new s...
The article reviews vol. 6 of the significant Deutscher Familiennamenatlas (Atlas of German Surnames...
The article focuses on the toponymy of the Eastern part of modern Germany where Slavic and Germanic ...
Apart from the Germania of Tacitus, Jordanes´s History of the Goths is the preeminent source for Ger...
Witold Ma´nczak has argued that Gothic is closer to Upper German than to Middle German, closer to Hi...
The Gothic people enter European history during the Roman Iron Age. Several groups of Goths come und...
open1noThis essay takes into account the Germanic personal names and their name-giving in the area ...
The Way of the Goths to Literacy as a Search for Identity. It is well known that the Goths, throug...
Jacob Grimm's Lithuanian studies culminated in his work on the German Dictionary (Deutsches Wörterbu...
The Jutes are known as one of the Germanic tribes who migrated to Britain and established the Englis...
The aim of this study is to propose a new interpretation of Jordanes’ famous work, De Origine Actibu...
The article gives a survey about a new manual to the Celtic languages in Western Europe. Its author ...
Scandinavian, closer to Danish than to Swedish, and that the original homeland of the Goths must the...
There is an air of mystery that surrounds the concept of place names. Questions revolving around the...
The author argues that archaeology and historical linguistics, each using their own tools, both seek...
People who leave their home, take their names with them. That is the reason why place names in new s...
The article reviews vol. 6 of the significant Deutscher Familiennamenatlas (Atlas of German Surnames...
The article focuses on the toponymy of the Eastern part of modern Germany where Slavic and Germanic ...